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1.12: Normal Modes of Vibration

  • Page ID
    204713
    • Wikipedia
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    Molecular vibrations

    Molecular vibrations are one of three kinds of motion, occurs when atoms in a molecule are in periodic motion. Molecular vibrations include constant translational and rotational motion. Translational motion occurs when the whole molecule goes in the same direction while the rotational motion occurs when the molecule spins like a top. Molecule vibrations fall into two main categories of stretching and bending. Stretching changes in interatomic distance along bong axis, while bending changes in angle between two bonds in a molecule. There are two types of stretching: symmetric stretching and asymmetric stretching and there are four types of bending: rocking, scissoring, wagging, and twisting.

    Normal modes of vibration

    Each atom in a molecule has three degree of freedom. A molecule with n atoms has 3n degree of freedom. 3n degree of freedom composes of translation, rotations and vibrations. All 3N degrees of freedom have symmetry relationships consistent with the irreducible representations of the molecule's point groups. Non-vibration modes (NVM) include translations and rotations. The vibrational motions of the atoms in a molecule can always be resolved into fundamental vibrational modes for the entire molecule.

    Atomic displacement coordinates

    The number of normal modes of vibration:

    • 3n-6 for non-linear molecules
    • 3n-5 for linear molecules

    To indicate the the number of normal modes of vibration:

    • Locate a set of three vectors along the Cartesian coordinates at each atom, representing the 3n degrees of freedom
    • Find the reducible representation
    • Reduce it to irreducible representations, subtract rotations and translations
    • The rest of irreducible representations will give the symmetry of the NMVs

    Samples

    vibrations for SO2

    C2v E C2 σv(xz) σ’v(yz)
    A1 1 1 1 1 z x2, y2, z2
    A2 1 1 -1 -1 Rz xy
    B1 1 -1 1 -1 x, Ry xz
    B2 1 -1 -1 1 y, Rx yz
    Γ3n 9 -1 1 3    
    Ni 3 1 1 3    
    Xi 3 -1 1 1    

    Reduce

    Γ3n=3A1+A2+2B1+3B2

    Γtrans=A1+B1+B2

    Γrotations=A2+B1+B2

    ΓNMV3n-6=2A1+B2

    NMVs are also identified by frequency numbers: v1, v2, v3,... The numbering is often assigned systematically in descending order of the symmetry species and among modes of the same symmetry in descending order of the vibrational frequency. Stretching modes have higher frequency than bending modes.


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